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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Parsing large files in Solaris 11 Post 302952419 by Don Cragun on Tuesday 18th of August 2015 08:01:49 PM
Old 08-18-2015
Having an entry that is 78 bits long that contains characters is very strange. Most entries in a file are a stream of 8 bit bytes. So, to split your entries (each of which is 9.75 bytes) into 11 byte lines (your 9.75 bytes per entry plus 2 bits for byte packing and a newline so the output is a text file), you're probably going to find writing a C program to read bytes and rotate bits into the proper positions easier than doing it in a shell script.

What two bits should be added to your entries to produce 10 characters (assuming ASCII or EBCDIC) from your input entries?

If your entries are all 78 bits long, why is your grep looking for a varying number of characters before and after the colon and why is the string it is matching varying from 1 to 76 characters (not bits or bytes) inclusive instead of the 78 bits you specified???

Please show us the first 200 bytes of your input file piped through the command:
Code:
od -bcx

 

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MAKEKEY(8)						      System Manager's Manual							MAKEKEY(8)

NAME
makekey - generate encryption key SYNOPSIS
/usr/lib/makekey DESCRIPTION
Makekey improves the usefulness of encryption schemes depending on a key by increasing the amount of time required to search the key space. It reads 10 bytes from its standard input, and writes 13 bytes on its standard output. The output depends on the input in a way intended to be difficult to compute (i.e. to require a substantial fraction of a second). The first eight input bytes (the input key) can be arbitrary ASCII characters. The last two (the salt) are best chosen from the set of digits, upper- and lower-case letters, and `.' and `/'. The salt characters are repeated as the first two characters of the output. The remaining 11 output characters are chosen from the same set as the salt and constitute the output key. The transformation performed is essentially the following: the salt is used to select one of 4096 cryptographic machines all based on the National Bureau of Standards DES algorithm, but modified in 4096 different ways. Using the input key as key, a constant string is fed into the machine and recirculated a number of times. The 64 bits that come out are distributed into the 66 useful key bits in the result. Makekey is intended for programs that perform encryption (e.g. ed and crypt(1)). Usually its input and output will be pipes. SEE ALSO
crypt(1), ed(1) MAKEKEY(8)
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